Upcoming Trainings
What is Regional Flavor Strategies? Regional Flavor Strategies (RFS) engages a broad spectrum of communities, business owners, not for profits and other institutions in collectively reclaiming and reshaping a region’s economic destiny while preserving its landscape, heritage and other assets. RFS creates strong networks among entrepreneurs and community sparkplugs while fostering a culture of collaboration and innovation within these networks and beyond. Business owners grow and help one another, communities become more effective in supporting entrepreneurship, community pride is nurtured, and local economies become more resilient and sustainable. This holistic and inclusive approach, has been tested over the past four years in rural Arkansas, Colorado, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, and Ohio. Building Support for Regional Flavor Strategies The Center is currently engaged in assuring that the important Regional Flavor work that has been accomplished over the past four years in six rural regions of the The following event is made possible by support from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation and the
Please join us for Regional Flavor Strategies Discovery Day Tuesday, December 8th in This daylong program will feature an overview of the Regional Flavor approach by project director Natalie Woodroofe and presentations by Leslie Schaller of ACEnet in Appalachian Ohio and Beth Wiedower from the Arkansas Delta Rural Heritage Development Initiative. Leslie and Beth have been part of the Regional Flavor Learning Cluster since 2005 and will share how this innovative model is creating opportunities for entrepreneurs and communities in their region. They will describe their efforts to build partnerships, to brand their regions, and shape regional policies in support of this exciting economic development work. Attendees will:
WHO SHOULD ATTEND: Those working in microenterprise, economic or community development, COST: This is a free event and includes lunch. However, you must register so we can have an accurate count for lunch and materials. TO REGISTER: Go to: http://regionalflavordiscoveryday.eventbrite.com WHEN: Tuesday, December 8th from 10 am to 4 pm WHERE: Southwest Virginia Higher
From Bristol, Tennessee, and west: Take I 81 north to Exit 14, bear right off the ramp toward Abingdon, go ¼ mile, and turn right at stop light onto Route 372E. From Wytheville, Virginia, and east: Take I 81 south to Exit 14, bear right off the ramp toward Abingdon, go ¼ mile, and turn right at stop light onto Route 372E. From Bluefield, West Virginia, and north: Take Highway 19 south to the stop light at West Main Street (Highway 11), turn right, go one mile to the second stop light, turn left onto Jonesborough Road, left again at stop light onto Route 372E. About our Discovery Day presenters: Leslie Schaller is Director of Programs at the Appalachian Center for Economic Networks (ACEnet), where she has worked since 1992, developing infrastructure and public policy that enables farmers and food producers to receive entrepreneurial support, resources and capital they need to access markets and improve sales/equity. ACEnet addresses rural economic development, entrepreneurship, and local food systems as a trainer-practitioner and peer-learner. In the early 1980s, Leslie operated an organic market garden and raised livestock, selling at the Athens Farmers Market (AFM) and area restaurants. In 1992, she founded a food security organization, Community Food Initiatives, which collects product donations from Athens Farmers Market vendors for area pantries and food banks. Since 1985 she has served as the Business Director of the Worker-Owned Restaurant corporation that operates Casa Nueva and Cantina and Casa Manufacturing in Beth Wiedower is a preservationist with experience in the fields of community revitalization and cultural heritage development. She currently serves as the Arkansas Delta Field Director for the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Rural Heritage Development Initiative - a multi-year pilot program focusing on heritage-based economic development in the 15-county Arkansas Delta. Beth serves as a board member of the Historic Preservation Alliance of Arkansas, as well as a member of the Historic District Commission of Helena, Arkansas. She is a graduate of the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Preservation Leadership Training. An Prior to her graduate studies, Beth served as a Tourism Consultant for the Arkansas Department of Parks and Tourism. She traveled the state and the country promoting Natalie Woodroofe is the owner of Rural Strategies Consulting and is leading the Woodroofe has lived and worked in rural communities for over 35 years. She was the founding executive director of the Women’s Rural Entrepreneurial Network (WREN) in NH for 11 years, leading the organization as a national model for microenterprise, community, and rural economic development. | ||